Chapter

 1       V|         For Aristotle himself, having said that God and matter
 2      VI|     that it is of three parts, having the faculty of reason, of
 3     VII|       understanding. Moreover, having first declared that everything
 4      IX|      And he in the first book, having said that he bad learned
 5      IX|      in social matters." Then, having proceeded a little further,
 6      XI|      all ignorance and deceit, having now perhaps wholly abandoned
 7     XII|    ancient ages died mute, not having the use of letters." It
 8    XIII|      to their own country. And having, as was natural, marvelled
 9    XIII|     fictions; but we ourselves having been in Alexandria, saw
10    XIII|    Pharos still preserved, and having heard these things from
11      XX|       really existing God. For having heard in Egypt that God
12     XXI|       are not. Men, therefore, having been duped by the deceiving
13     XXI|       the deceiving demon, and having dared to disobey God, were
14     XXI|     the living God. Wherefore, having appeared to him first, as
15    XXII|     PLATO.~ ~Plato accordingly having learned this in Egypt, and
16   XXIII|        contradict himself. For having formerly stated that he
17    XXIV|      were to promise me, that, having burnished off my old age,
18     XXV|        turned, is convicted of having fallen into the very errors
19     XXV|    writing of their histories, having not yet been discovered.~ ~
20    XXVI|       prophecies he read, and, having learned from them the doctrine
21   XXVII|     but Ardiaeus and the rest, having bound hand and foot, and
22   XXVII|      feet and skin. But Plato, having fallen in with the testimonies
23   XXVII|     the prophets in Egypt, and having accepted what they teach
24  XXVIII|    only Plato, but Homer also, having received similar enlightenment
25  XXVIII|      he had learnt that Helen, having received from Theon's wife,
26  XXVIII|       moon, and the stars. For having learned this in Egypt, and
27  XXVIII|     learned this in Egypt, and having been much taken with what
28    XXIX|        source than from Moses, having learned, indeed, from the
29    XXIX|      the name of form, but not having at the same time been instructed
30     XXX|   formed of earth, Homer, too, having discovered from the ancient
31     XXX|        things Homer and Plato, having learned in Egypt from the
32   XXXII|   These things, I think, Plato having learned from the prophets
33    XXXV|  Greece, is now come, that ye, having been persuaded by the secular
34    XXXV|       learn the true religion. Having then laid aside all false
35   XXXVI|        God." Socrates, indeed, having uttered this last sentence
36  XXXVII|      said that she washed, and having put on her robe again, retires
37  XXXVII|     the verses, the prophetess having no remembrance of what she
38  XXXVII|      ceased, and the reporters having, through their lack of education,
39 XXXVIII| inseparable from Him in power, having assumed man, who had been
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